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Post by Deleted on Aug 2, 2017 22:49:44 GMT -5
Here's me catching the tail of the bandwagon. Ask away
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Post by Deleted on Aug 2, 2017 22:53:46 GMT -5
what's your favorite food specific to your culture? if any.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 2, 2017 23:04:27 GMT -5
what's your favorite food specific to your culture? if any. South Africa has a really big mish-mash of cultures, so everyone brings a little something to the plate! I really love biltong, which is like jerky but 100000000x better, and bunny chow which is just curry in half a loaf of bread that has been hollowed out (it doesn't have rabbit meat in it!) Unfortunately I don't really eat either anymore, as I am vegetarian.
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Post by mickle on Aug 2, 2017 23:05:30 GMT -5
what's your favorite food specific to your culture? if any. South Africa has a really big mish-mash of cultures, so everyone brings a little something to the plate! I really love biltong, which is like jerky but 100000000x better, and bunny chow which is just curry in half a loaf of bread that has been hollowed out (it doesn't have rabbit meat in it!) Unfortunately I don't really eat either anymore, as I am vegetarian. know any language?
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Post by Deleted on Aug 2, 2017 23:13:41 GMT -5
do you see de facto remnants of apartheid in the present day? and how is it taught in school, being a recent (and presumably sensitive) part of south african history? do you speak afrikaans or know anyone who does, and how prevalent is it? how do south africans generally view Die Antwoord? how do you view them? do you drive on the left hand side of the road (2 lazy 2 google)?
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Post by Deleted on Aug 2, 2017 23:26:31 GMT -5
South Africa has a really big mish-mash of cultures, so everyone brings a little something to the plate! I really love biltong, which is like jerky but 100000000x better, and bunny chow which is just curry in half a loaf of bread that has been hollowed out (it doesn't have rabbit meat in it!) Unfortunately I don't really eat either anymore, as I am vegetarian. know any language? We start learning Afrikaans from Grade 2, and take it right up until Grade 12. At my school, we took Zulu in grades 4/5 I don't speak Afrikaans very well at all, since we moved
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Post by Deleted on Aug 2, 2017 23:33:26 GMT -5
do you see de facto remnants of apartheid in the present day? and how is it taught in school, being a recent (and presumably sensitive) part of south african history? do you speak afrikaans or know anyone who does, and how prevalent is it? how do south africans generally view Die Antwoord? how do you view them? do you drive on the left hand side of the road (2 lazy 2 google)? (( I probs should have put a note in the beginning saying I've moved, but eh, I'm still South African lol )) I guess so- you get the 'townships', which is where the large majority of poor black people live- they don't have houses, they usually just build the homes out of whatever they can find/steal. I think that a lot of the ideas and stuff are more common in the older generation, whereas my generation don't really....care. If I'm honest, there is now a lot of reverse apartheid happening. We cover apartheid as a part of history, and I think it is quite factual. Lots about Nelson Mandela, and the ANC. Not very well, but EVERYONE speaks it. You could say that by default we are bi linguists. Haven't heard them Yes we do
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